Miami Dolphins' suspended lineman Richie Incognito spoke out for the first time Sunday in an interview with Fox Sports' Jay Glazer since he became the focus of an NFL harassment investigation based on accusations made by teammate Jonathan Martin.

After his dominant re-election victory, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie appeared on Fox News Sunday, ABC's This Week and CBS's Face the Nation to campaign for 2016 talk about the Garden State's future, the controversial Time cover, and his Romney vice presidential snub.

The now-independent journalist Glenn Greenwald hinted which country would be the next target of his carefully orchestrated document leaks exposing the massive, intrusive spying operations, and it's our loveable, hapless neighbors to the north.

China has better relationships with some news organizations than others, because the restrictive country doesn't hesitate to toss out the ones that defy it. For example, Bloomberg recently killed two stories for fear of getting evicted, and a Reuters journalist was denied a visa over his institution's past misgivings.

There might be a historic nuclear deal on the table between the five major world powers and Iran if it wasn't for that meddling France. Word coming out of negotiations in Geneva this weekend points to France as the lone holdout for stricter sanctions than those agreed to by other countries.

The former Secretary of State was offered the President's position at Penn State through a search firm hired to find a steady hand to help the University in the wake of the Jerry Sandusky scandal. She turned them down.

The BBC released the first official full trailer for the Doctor Who 50th anniversary special, The Day of the Doctor, and the show's notoriously meticulous fans are parsing through what little footage they have to figure out what they can learn about the new changes.

The man who originally tried to broker the sale of the Rob Ford crack tape finally revealed his identity Friday evening in a pair of explosive interviews that offered more details in the never-ending, increasingly ludicrous Canadian scandal.

The highly-publicized auction of an original Banksy work from his New York period -- with the proceeds going to charity -- fell apart at the last minute thanks to a shady buyer. But some scorned collectors who lost are raising new questions about the smoke and mirrors process through which the sale went down.

Netflix killed the video store. Blockbuster as we knew it died Tuesday because the world is "clearly moving to digital distribution of video entertainment," according to DISH President and CEO Joseph Clayton. For many, Blockbuster was a video store, a first time job or an important part of their childhood. This is a eulogy.

Like every great scandal, it started with an irksome early morning phone call right after Easter. That's what set off the Toronto Star's great hunt for the video of mayor Rob Ford smoking crack cocaine, and the investigation into Ford's interesting associates.

For about the last seven months, people have celebrated the drone program's highly publicized hand-off from the CIA to the Defense Department. Well, here's the thing: the transition process is going to take a lot longer than first expected.

The two men suing the New York Post for their accusatory Boston Marathon "Bag Men" headline are still fighting hard to clear their names, but the Post won't budge an inch, arguing their cover was justified because of this one e-mail from a government official.

The Miami Dolphins (and by extension all of the NFL) have a problem on their hands after a rift between two teammates exploded in accusations of racially-loaded harassment and abuse that led one player to leave the team the other to be suspended.

Twitter's IPO road show didn't get off the greatest start, but an updated S-1 filing Monday rose the company's stock price, which is good news for investors. But the company also disclosed a pending legal fight that might turn some people away.

Toronto mayor Rob Ford asked citizens for forgiveness during his weekly radio show with his brother, city councillor Doug Ford, and apologized for his "mistakes," but never admitted to or acknowledged any drug use.

Former Republican presidential nominee Mitt Romney returned to the Sunday shows almost exactly one year since he lost the election to Barack Obama, only to attack the President and call his second term into question.

Voter ID laws are meant to prevent devious fraudsters from rigging elections. Legendary Texas politician and former Speaker of the House Jim Wright was probably not the kind of person meant to get entangled in the law's bureaucracy.

Hillary Clinton's non-existent 2016 campaign for President got a huge boost of support Saturday evening when New York Sen. Chuck Schumer, the third ranking Democrat in the Senate, endorsed and encouraged her to run for the White House.